2017 A Journal of Student Scholarship A Publication of the Sigma Kappa Chapter of Phi Alpha Theta A Publication of the Sigma Kappa & the Southern Illinois University Carbondale History Department & the Southern Illinois University Volume 17 Volume LEGACY • A Journal of Student Scholarship • Volume 17 • 2017 LEGACY Volume 17 2017 A Journal of Student Scholarship Editorial Staff Denise Diliberto Geoff Lybeck Gray Whaley Faculty Editor Hale Yılmaz The editorial staff would like to thank all those who supported this issue of Legacy, especially the SIU Undergradute Student Government, Phi Alpha Theta, SIU Department of History faculty and staff, our history alumni, our department chair Dr. Jonathan Wiesen, the students who submitted papers, and their faculty mentors Professors Jo Ann Argersinger, Jonathan Bean, José Najar, Joseph Sramek and Hale Yılmaz. A publication of the Sigma Kappa Chapter of Phi Alpha Theta & the History Department Southern Illinois University Carbondale history.siu.edu © 2017 Department of History, Southern Illinois University All rights reserved LEGACY Volume 17 2017 A Journal of Student Scholarship Table of Contents The Effects of Collegiate Gay Straight Alliances in the 1980s and 1990s Alicia Mayen ....................................................................................... 1 Students in the Carbondale, Illinois Civil Rights Movement Bryan Jenks ...................................................................................... 15 The Crisis of Legitimacy: Resistance, Unity, and the Stamp Act of 1765, 1763 – 1766 Coleman Fitch ................................................................................... 27 Freedom Summer: Going South for Social Justice Jesse Hinds ........................................................................................ 41 The Ghetto Brothers: Reconciliation, Music, and the Brokerage of Peace among Bronx Street Gangs in the 1970s Margaret McKinney ..........................................................................51 The Rise and Fall of Lighter-Than-Air Aircraft, 1783 – 1937 Marc Mercado ................................................................................... 65 Contributors .................................................................................................. 81 Alicia Mayen The Effects of Collegiate Gay Straight Alliances in the 1980s and 1990s The word “homosexual” comes from the late nineteenth century German psychologist Karoly Maria Benkert.1 The term refers to people who are sexually attracted to people of the same sex.2 Homosexuals (hereafter referred to as “gay” people) existed in the United States for many years, eventually coming into the public eye in the mid-twentieth century. In the 1920s and 1930s, openly gay characters appeared in Broadway plays and partook in events known as drag balls.3 While psychologist Evelyn Hooker observed that many gay neighborhoods existed in the 1950s,4 there were no gay or lesbian organizations until the emergence of the Mattachine Society in 1953.5 During that time, however, no official organizations existed for gay and lesbian students on college campuses. The organizations, which advocates and activists later referred to as Gay Straight Alliances (GSAs), did not emerge on college campuses until the late 1960s and early 1970s.6 GSAs came in response to the start of the Gay Liberation Movement and to the riots at the Stonewall Inn in 1969.7 Today GSAs can be found on many college and university campuses nationwide, including on the campus of Southern Illinois University Carbondale (SIUC). Examining the actions of Gay Straight Alliances at SIU, in conjunction with historical events and trends, sheds light upon the impact that GSAs have had on the local LGBT communities they serve.8 Using a local collegiate GSA, Saluki Rainbow Network at SIU (and its previous iterations), this study highlights the effects of collegiate GSAs on their local communities. These effects include the building of a community and an increased public awareness concerning health issues, such as HIV/AIDS. Due to a lack of records from other decades, the focus of this paper is the unfolding of these changes during the 1980s and 1990s. In order to better understand the effects of GSAs during this time period, one must first understand that they emerged out of the Gay Liberation Movement and the 1969 Stonewall events (a series of riots between gay civilians and police).9 Contrary to popular belief, the Gay Liberation Movement did not begin with the events at Stonewall. The movement, though slightly different than the post-Stonewall movement, began when Harry Hay established the Mattachine Society in San Francisco.10 Hay, a Communist Party member, established the group in the 1950s using the party itself as a model for the Mattachine Society.11 Using a multi-tiered model, members of the Society viewed themselves as an 2 LEGACY oppressed minority group and sought ways to voice those feelings in their biweekly meetings.12 These meetings were popular in San Francisco, despite rumors of bar raids and what former member Konrad Stevens described as “… [fears of] the government getting a list of names and [expecting] that cops would come barging in and arrest everybody.”13 Here, Stevens echoed a fear that many gay men during that time had, as many felt that they were under attack by the government. While the government did not openly persecute gays and lesbians prior to 1950, American communists or suspected communists were, due to the Cold War. During this time, the House Un-American Activities committee (HUAC) targeted many people, such as leftists in Hollywood.14 By 1950, the push against communism in the United States finally reached the gay community. Many people saw the actions and identities of “others” such as homosexuals as morally deviant, and the government deemed them dangerous as a result.15 Despite that fact, membership in the Mattachine Society continued to grow, as both gay men and lesbian women founded chapters in Berkeley and Oakland.16 Around the mid-1950s, the Society grew into a significantly more public foundation, which in combination with Hay’s communist background led to a change in leadership and an eventual decline in membership.17 In 1956, Hal Call became the president of the society, and by 1961 he decentralized the society so that all of its chapters became separate organizations within the State of California.18 Decentralization led to the collapse of the Mattachine Society, leaving behind the Daughters of Bilitis, a social group for lesbian women, founded in 1951.19 These organizations never had extremely large memberships over their lifespans, each organization only having a few hundred members,20 and they were not as radical as the later liberation movement.21 But they sowed ideological seeds within gay and lesbian communities in California and across the United States, laying the foundation for later movements by demonstrating that gays and lesbians could come together and make sure that “unjust laws would crumble.”22 Activists built Gay Straight Alliances, including the first iteration of Saluki Rainbow Network, on this foundation, and the movement spawned by the riots at Stonewall.23 In fact, the Mattachine Society served as the inspiration for the first student gay-rights organization.24 The other spark, the Stonewall riots, inspired the first gay straight alliances. The events that occurred at the Stonewall Inn, a gay bar in Greenwich Village, New York, took place between late June and early July 1969.25 Stonewall Inn, prior to June 1969, was a mafia-run gay bar that saw hundreds of patrons each night.26 To Martin Boyce and Dick Leitsch, who are former frequenters of Stonewall Inn, the bar was “like a watering hole in the savannah,” as many considered gay bars the social centers of gay life during that time.27 For many, gay bars like the Stonewall Inn were a sanctuary. Despite the presence of societies such as the Mattachine and Daughters of Bilitis, homosexual men and women faced persecution during the 1950s and 1960s. Homosexuality became Alicia Mayen 3 criminalized (Illinois became the first state to decriminalize it in 1962)28 and medicalized, with many states sending homosexual individuals to mental institutions for being “sexual psychopaths.”29 During the 1960s, governmental officials, such as New York City’s mayor, came under significant pressure to crack down on the homosexuals in the city. This led to numerous police raids on gay bars during that time, which in turn led to many arrests.30 In an interview featured in David Carter’s Documentary Stonewall Uprising, law professor William Eskridge stated, “at the peak, as many as five hundred people per year were arrested for the crimes against nature, and between three thousand and five thousand five hundred people per year arrested for various solicitation or loitering crimes.”31 Many of these solicitation arrests were for the solicitation of sex and alcohol.32 Loitering crimes included frequenting the Mafia-run Stonewall Inn.33 In other words, police arrested between three thousand and five thousand five hundred people in New York City each year for being homosexual or for going to gay bars such as the Stonewall Inn. Undoubtedly, this caused tensions between police and the gay and lesbian community, especially because police entrapped people prior to arresting them, or raided gay bars when they were full of people.34 Stonewall Inn had been raided several times during this period, but the raid in June 1969 ended up differently
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